Jacobs v. Stevens

57 N.H. 610, 1876 N.H. LEXIS 135
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedAugust 11, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 N.H. 610 (Jacobs v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobs v. Stevens, 57 N.H. 610, 1876 N.H. LEXIS 135 (N.H. 1876).

Opinions

FROM COOS CIRCUIT COURT. Upon being arrested, the defendant procured bail in the manner prescribed by Gen. Stats., ch. 206, sec. 13 — that is to say, special bail — in accordance with the practice in this state. See Chadbourn v. The Lancaster Bank, 24 N.H. 333.

The object of such bail is, to secure the appearance and attendance of the defendant in court — Norton v. Danvers, 7 Term 375 Lewis v. Brackenridge, 1 Blackf. 115; and the contract of the defendant and his sureties, or bail, as indicated by the long established practice in this state, and regulated by Gen. Stats., chs. 206, 223, was formerly expressed in the condition of the bond given to the sheriff upon the arrest of the principal, it being in substance that the defendant shall appear to answer to the action — shall satisfy the plaintiff's judgment, or shall surrender his body to be taken in execution, or that the bail shall pay the debt. Hampton v. Dunklee, 1 N.H. 173. In modern practice all this condition and contract is regarded as expressed by the bail putting their names on the back of the writ, thereby giving their assent to the taking upon themselves the liabilities of bail. Pierce v. Reed, 2 N.H. 360-362.

In this manner the bail become sureties for the appearance of their principal in court, and all the purposes of bail above and bail below, technically speaking, are answered and fulfilled. See Bouv. Law Dic., tit. Bail.

As by the terms of this contract the bail become sureties for the appearance of their principal, so the principal himself agrees to appear at the return day of the writ, unless this obligation shall be sooner discharged by due course of law.

By the prescribed form of a writ of capias — Gen. Stats., ch. 203, sec. 15 — the officer is commanded to arrest the body of the defendant, or to attach his goods or estate, and summon him to appear at court. This form is called a capias and attachment. Although by the terms of this precept the officer is directed to summon the defendant, yet no writ of summons, in practice, is given to the defendant, nor is it required by law, — the writ of summons in the form prescribed by law being required only in the case where the defendant's goods or estate are attached, in which case, the alternative requirement of the writ of summons and attachment having been fulfilled, the process, so far as it is a capias, is functus officio. And the reason why the writ of summons is not required to be served, where bail is given to the sheriff, is because, by the very act of giving bail, the defendant has acknowledged notice, and agreed to appear in court at the return day.

But the defendant, being arrested, may require the officer making the *Page 614 arrest to carry him before two justices, one of whom shall be of the quorum, and, upon certain prescribed conditions, these justices may discharge him from arrest. In such a case, the defendant not having given bail, the service by arrest is defeated and avoided by the discharge, and the defendant is under no obligation to appear at court; and the court has no jurisdiction of the cause, unless a new and different service is made, after the discharge, as may properly then be done by the unexhausted alternative command of the precept, to attach the defendant's property and summon him to appear in court. Chadbourn v. The Bank, before cited; Wheeler v. Barry, 6 Vt. 579.

In the case before us, the defendant, being arrested, gave bail in the usual way, and made no effort to defeat the service of the writ. He submitted to it and came into court by his attorneys, and then moved that he and his bail be discharged upon the ground that he did not conceal his property nor intend to leave the state; and this motion was granted. The effect of this was, that he was discharged from arrest, and his bail was discharged from the obligation which the bail had assumed. But the defendant was then properly in court and subject to its jurisdiction.

In this state, the precise contract which is implied by the act of giving bail is not now prescribed by statute. Formerly it was literally defined. By the statute of February 15, 1791, entitled "An act regulating bail in civil causes," it was expressed as an obligation "for the appearance of the party to answer the suit, and abide the order or judgment of the court that shall be given thereon." N.H. Laws, ed. of 1792, p. 99.

This obligation, as I have before remarked, answers the purpose of bail above and bail below; that is, the sureties not only bind themselves either to satisfy the plaintiff, his debt and costs, or to surrender the defendant into custody, provided judgment be against him and he fail to do so; but, also, they bind themselves to the sheriff to secure the defendant's appearance on the return day of the writ, to answer to the action and abide the order of court. 3 Bouv. Inst. 195-197.

The obligation or contract of bail prescribed by statute in 1791 it is presumed has never been abrogated or changed in this state. In Pierce v. Reed, 2 N.H. 360, Mr. Chief-Justice RICHARDSON says, — "In this state bail is given to the sheriff by bond;" but on page 362 he says, — "The real contract into which bail enter is prescribed by statute." "No lawyer," he continues, "would think of looking into the condition of a bail bond in order to ascertain the nature of the contract. Indeed, a bail bond is rarely actually taken by the sheriff in this state. The bail, instead of executing a bond, put their names on the back of the writ, and thereby give their assent to the taking upon themselves the liabilities of bail."

And now, by statute (Gen. Stats., ch. 206, sec. 13), it is enacted that "When any person is arrested on mesne process, he shall be committed to jail, unless he procures one or more persons of sufficient ability, to *Page 615 the satisfaction of the officer, to become his bail, by indorsing their names or signatures as bail on the back of the writ."

But bail now means just what it meant in 1791 — security for the defendant's appearance; and when the defendant has appeared in court, whether his bail remain liable or become discharged, he is there, subject to the order of the court; and no discharge of the defendant from arrest, or of his bail from their liability, shall discharge the debt. Gen. Stats., ch. 206, sec. 11.

The defendant, being thus in court, moved to dismiss the action "because the writ was never legally served upon him." And upon this motion the defendant offered to prove that he was not legally liable to arrest at the time he was arrested. The court excluded the evidence, and the defendant excepted. But the case finds that the plaintiff made the usual affidavit for the arrest of the defendant on the back of the writ, and the officer's return showed that the writ was served by arresting the body of the defendant and taking bail.

No defect in the service is pointed out, and it is not suggested upon what ground the defendant was not legally liable to arrest.

"Where the defect is the want of legal service of the writ, and such defect is apparent on the record, the court, on motion, if seasonably made, will generally quash the proceeding."

"If the process be defective in point of form, or its direction, teste, or return, or the attorney's name be not indorsed upon it, the defendant may move to set aside the proceeding."

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57 N.H. 610, 1876 N.H. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-stevens-nh-1876.